Flamingo

Flamingo konsulentvirksomhed med speciale i ADHD og vredeshåndtering.

23/04/2026

Eller... "people do things for good reasons"☝️
For mange år siden da jeg første gang hørte dette "statement" fangede det mig med det samme og det er blevet hængende siden - både i mit professionelle og private liv.

Man kunne måske fristes til at kalde det en "poppet udgave" af Kierkegaards kloge ord om hvordan vi bedst hjælper et andet menneske.

For der er i sandhed så meget vi ikke forstår- og som vi kun kan forsøge at forstå, ved at lytte lytte lytte og være oprigtigt nysgerrige på hvad et andet menneske er "rundet af".

"Good reasons" er ikke det samme som at det altid er klogt, smart, gennemtænkt, empatisk, kærligt...(nogen gange LANGT fra)...men den gode grund (årsag) til en bestemt adfærd, den er der altid et sted.

Måske er rygsækken fyldt med skyld, skam, forkerthed, sorg, ulykkelig kærlighed, træthed, misbrug, længsel, ensomhed...eller måske "bider" livet bare lidt og overskuddet er småt.

Jeg øver mig, hver dag, både på jobbet, i min virksomhed og i fritiden/ privat, i at prøve at forstå det jeg ikke forstår...🤷‍♀️😊
og når jeg nogen gange alligevel absolut intet forstår....🤔😉😄 så er den største øvelse at forsøge at møde det kærligt, nysgerrigt og omsorgsfuldt 🙆‍♀️😊❤

( Og...nogen gange er det faktisk også HELT ok at beslutte sig for ikke at kunne og ville forstå noget som helst.. og lade andre mennesker tage ansvar for deres eget liv og egen adfærd)❤

https://www.facebook.com/share/1DTmb8zune/
21/01/2026

https://www.facebook.com/share/1DTmb8zune/

Why Women Aren’t “Suddenly” Getting ADHD Diagnoses — They’re Finally Unable to Keep Pretending

Have you noticed how often people ask this question with confusion, suspicion, or quiet dismissal?

“Why are women suddenly getting diagnosed with ADHD now?”

As if ADHD just appeared out of nowhere.
As if it’s a trend.
As if something external caused it.

But the truth is far less dramatic and far more painful.

Women are not suddenly developing ADHD.
They are finally reaching the point where survival mode stops working.

ADHD Was Always There — The Mask Was Just Better

For decades, many women with ADHD were not missed because they didn’t have symptoms.
They were missed because they managed them.

They learned early how to be:
Polite.
Quiet.
Helpful.
Organized on the outside.
Emotionally responsible for everyone else.

They learned how to compensate.

They overprepared.
They overachieved.
They overexplained.
They over-apologized.

Not because life was easy, but because failure felt dangerous.

ADHD in girls often didn’t look like disruption.
It looked like anxiety.
Perfectionism.
People-pleasing.
Burnout.

So it wasn’t recognized as ADHD.

It was praised.

The “Good Girl” Act Was Never Free

The image says it plainly: the good girl act collapsed.

That act cost women everything.

Constant self-control.
Constant emotional regulation.
Constant monitoring of tone, behavior, and performance.

Mistakes were not allowed.
Messiness was not allowed.
Rest was not allowed.

And for a long time, that act worked.

Not because it was healthy, but because women were willing to pay the price.

Until their nervous systems couldn’t anymore.

Survival Mode Has an Expiration Date

Survival mode is powerful, but it is not sustainable.

It runs on stress hormones.
On fear of disappointing others.
On adrenaline and urgency.

That can carry someone through:
School.
Early career.
Parenthood.
Caring for others.

But eventually, the body keeps score.

And that’s when everything starts to fall apart.

Focus disappears.
Memory worsens.
Emotional regulation collapses.
Burnout hits hard.

Not because ADHD got worse.
Because the coping strategies finally failed.

Perimenopause and Menopause Remove the Last Safety Net

This part is critical and still widely ignored.

Hormones play a massive role in dopamine regulation.
Dopamine is central to ADHD.

For many women, estrogen fluctuations during perimenopause and menopause reduce the brain’s ability to compensate.

The systems that once held everything together stop working.

Suddenly:
You can’t focus the way you used to.
You can’t mask the way you used to.
You can’t push through the way you used to.

And people say:
“What happened to you?”

Nothing happened.

The scaffolding collapsed.

“We Can’t Fake It Anymore” Is Not a Failure

This line matters deeply.

Women are not failing.
They are finally telling the truth.

The truth is:
It was always this hard.
They were always exhausted.
They were always struggling internally.

The difference is they no longer have the capacity to hide it.

And that honesty is being mistaken for dysfunction.

Why ADHD in Women Was Invisible for So Long

Diagnostic criteria were built around boys.

Hyperactivity.
Disruptive behavior.
External impulsivity.

But many women internalized their ADHD.

Their impulsivity became rumination.
Their hyperactivity became anxiety.
Their distractibility became overwhelm.

They didn’t cause trouble.

They became responsible.

And responsibility hid everything.

Being “High-Functioning” Was Actually High-Cost

Many women were labeled high-functioning.

They had careers.
Families.
Responsibilities.

But functioning came at a cost:
Chronic anxiety.
Exhaustion.
Self-doubt.
Shame.
Burnout.

High-functioning didn’t mean well-supported.

It meant unsupported but coping.

Until they couldn’t.

Late Diagnosis Is Often Grief Before Relief

When women finally receive an ADHD diagnosis, the first emotion is rarely joy.

It’s grief.

Grief for the years spent thinking they were broken.
Grief for the support they never received.
Grief for the version of themselves that could have existed with understanding.

The diagnosis doesn’t change who they are.

It changes how much blame they carry.

This Is Not a Trend — It’s a Reckoning

Women are not “suddenly” ADHD.

What’s sudden is:
Awareness.
Language.
Access to information.
Permission to stop pretending.

Social media didn’t create ADHD in women.
It gave women words for what they were already living.

And once you have language, you can no longer unsee the truth.

Why This Makes People Uncomfortable

This wave of late diagnosis challenges uncomfortable beliefs.

That women should be able to handle everything.
That if someone is coping, they don’t need help.
That strength means silence.

It exposes how many women were praised for suffering quietly.

And that realization is confronting.

Diagnosis Is Not an Excuse — It’s an Explanation

Women are not using ADHD as a way out.

They are using it as a way forward.

To rebuild lives that don’t require constant self-erasure.
To ask for support without shame.
To stop measuring themselves against standards that never fit.

This is not about lowering expectations.

It’s about realistic ones.

If You Are a Woman Recognizing Yourself in This

You are not late.
You are not dramatic.
You are not imagining it.

Your survival strategies worked until they didn’t.

That does not mean you failed.

It means your body finally demanded honesty.

And that honesty is the beginning of healing, not the end of competence.

Women aren’t suddenly being diagnosed with ADHD.

They are reaching the point where survival mode expires.

The good girl act collapses.
Perfectionism breaks.
Hormones shift.
And the nervous system says, no more.

This isn’t weakness.

It’s the cost of carrying everything alone for too long.

And if women are finally being seen, named, and supported, that’s not a problem to solve.

That’s progress long overdue.

💚
20/01/2026

💚

I'm not the wound, I'm not the fallNot the silence, not the wallI'm not the night they couldn't seeI'm the best me, rising freeI'm not what happened to meI'm...

17/11/2025
15/11/2025

Loving Someone with ADHD: The Unspoken Truth

When you love someone with ADHD, you’re not just loving a person — you’re loving a whirlwind of thoughts, emotions, and energy.
You’re loving someone who feels everything intensely, who’s always trying, and who often battles their own brain just to show up in the world.

Dr. Kelly Vincent’s words beautifully remind us that ADHD isn’t a lack of love, attention, or care — it’s a difference in how the brain processes, reacts, and prioritizes.

If you’ve ever felt confused, frustrated, or hurt while loving someone with ADHD, this is what you need to remember 👇

🧠 They’re Not Ignoring You

When your partner zones out mid-conversation, it’s easy to take it personally.
But it’s not that they don’t care — it’s that their brain just opened five tabs at once.

Their attention isn’t gone; it’s just split. They might be thinking about something you said five minutes ago, something they forgot to do yesterday, and a random memory that popped up out of nowhere — all at the same time.

ADHD brains are constantly pinging. It’s not about disinterest — it’s about overstimulation.

So when they ask, “Wait, what did you just say?” — take a breath.
They’re still here. Their mind just took a detour.

💌 Forgetting Things Doesn’t Mean They Don’t Care

They didn’t forget to text back because you don’t matter.
They didn’t miss your birthday because they’re careless.
They just have a different kind of memory — one that’s often cluttered with distractions, emotions, and mental to-do lists.

Think of their brain like a file cabinet that’s constantly being opened, slammed, and reorganized while the papers are still flying.

It’s not personal. It’s neurological.

Reminders, gentle notes, and compassion go much further than frustration ever could.

🌪️ They’re Not Zoning Out Because They’re Disinterested

Sometimes their eyes glaze over while you’re talking. But inside, their brain is alive with a dozen thoughts at once.

They’re not ignoring you — they just drifted for a second, caught by the current of a new idea or thought.
It’s not that you’re boring — it’s that their brain is constantly scanning the horizon for stimulation.

Bring them back gently. A light touch, a kind word, or even humor can re-ground them.

🔥 When They Hyperfocus

Hyperfocus is one of ADHD’s double-edged gifts.

When they’re deep into a project or hobby, hours vanish. They might forget to eat, text, or even breathe. It’s not that they’ve chosen something over you — it’s that their brain has locked in, and they’ve lost track of time and space.

Don’t take it as rejection — take it as passion.
They can pour that same intensity into love, creativity, and connection — when their brain finally comes up for air.

🧗‍♀️ Transitions Are Hard

Something as small as getting off the couch to do the dishes can feel like scaling a mountain.

ADHD brains struggle with task initiation — that’s not laziness, it’s executive dysfunction.
Going from “thinking about it” to “doing it” is a neurological hurdle, not a motivational one.

The key? Compassion over criticism.
Encouragement, structure, and understanding make that mountain smaller.

💔 They Already Feel Bad

If they forgot, snapped, or lost track — trust this:
They already feel awful about it.

ADHD comes with chronic guilt and shame — not because they did something wrong, but because they know they did, and they can’t always control it.

A little grace goes a long way. You can’t punish someone into better focus — but you can love them into more self-trust.

💬 They’re Not Being Dramatic

Rejection hits harder when you have ADHD.

There’s something called Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria (RSD) — it’s when small criticisms or perceived disapproval feel physically painful.

It’s not “overreacting.” It’s a genuine neurological response.

So when they shut down, tear up, or take something to heart, remind them:
“You’re safe with me. You don’t have to be perfect to be loved.”

🧷 They Genuinely Want to Remember

They want to follow through. They want to keep their promises. They want to be consistent.

But their executive function — the brain’s management system — sometimes has other plans.

They forget not because they don’t care, but because their mental system short-circuits under too many tabs, too much pressure, or too little dopamine.

That’s why small, visual cues (like sticky notes or calendar alerts) can make a huge difference. Love them through the chaos — not around it.

😞 They’re Not Unmotivated

ADHD isn’t a lack of motivation — it’s a struggle to access it on demand.

They’re not lazy. They’re overwhelmed.
They see the entire mountain at once and freeze, unsure where to start climbing.

You can help by breaking things down, by asking:
“What’s one small step we can take right now?”

Support looks like collaboration, not control.

💛 Love Is Patience — and Post-It Notes

Loving someone with ADHD means loving out loud.

It means reminders. Grace. Gentle redirections.
It means knowing they’re trying — even when it doesn’t look like it.

It means celebrating the small wins.
The text they remembered. The appointment they made. The day they didn’t give up.

It means understanding that “I forgot” isn’t “I don’t care.”

Because underneath the distraction, the impulsivity, and the mess — is someone who loves you deeply, wholeheartedly, and differently.

❤️ Final Thought

ADHD love isn’t calm — it’s cosmic.
It’s loud, colorful, sometimes chaotic, but always real.

If you can love them through the noise, you’ll find something rare —
A heart that’s endlessly curious, fiercely loyal, and constantly trying to do better — even when their brain makes it hard.

So remember this:
Patience isn’t pity.
Understanding isn’t weakness.
And love — real love — is sometimes spelled in reminders, grace, and sticky notes.

07/07/2025
https://www.facebook.com/share/198ur6kUXz/
07/07/2025

https://www.facebook.com/share/198ur6kUXz/

"Your anger is validated. Let me say it again, and let it echo through the chambers of your heart: your anger is real, it is justified, and it matters. If someone has wounded you, betrayed your trust, or treated you with cruelty, your fury is not an overreaction. It is the natural voice of your spirit rising up to defend what is sacred within you.

Your rage is the thunder that rolls in after lightning has split the sky, reminding everyone—and especially yourself—that you are not to be harmed without consequence. You deserve to be heard, to be believed, and to be seen, even when your pain is wrapped in fire.

Anger is a signpost, not a flaw. It marks the places inside you where you have been wronged. To feel anger is not a weakness, but a vital force that demands justice and restoration. When you allow yourself to truly feel the depth of your rage, you honor the parts of you that were silenced or dismissed. You claim your right to exist fully, with all the passion and complexity that being human entails. Your anger is a declaration: “I matter. My boundaries matter. My soul is worthy of dignity.”

But I also want you to know this: anger is not your home, even though it may feel like a shelter after the storm. It is a visitor, fierce and necessary, but if you linger too long in its embrace, it can begin to burn you, too. There is power in rage, yes, but there is also danger in letting it consume you. Your heart was not made only for fire; it was made for warmth, for growth, for the quiet miracle of healing.

After the roar of your anger has echoed through your being, I invite you to return to yourself—not the self that was hurt or diminished, but the self that knows its own worth. Your truth is not defined by the wounds someone else inflicted. Your truth is the steady, persistent light that remains when the flames die down. It is your gentle strength, your hope, your capacity for love—not for those who hurt you, but for yourself.

Love, in this sense, is not forgiveness for the sake of the other. It is not excusing or forgetting the harm done. Instead, it is the radical act of choosing your own peace, of refusing to let the poison of someone else’s actions take root in your garden. Softness is not weakness; it is the courage to keep your heart open, to nurture what is beautiful and possible within you, even after devastation.

It is not your job to carry the burden of someone else’s cruelty forever. You are allowed to set it down, to refuse to make a home for it inside you. Your healing is your own, and it does not require the participation or permission of those who have wronged you. You can rage, you can grieve, you can mourn—but you can also choose to reclaim the parts of yourself that anger tried to protect.

Returning to softness does not mean returning to vulnerability for the sake of those who hurt you. It means reclaiming your own tenderness as a gift you give to yourself. It is a quiet rebellion: to refuse to let their harm close your heart to the wonders of your own life. It is the slow, patient work of tending to your own wounds with compassion, rather than punishment.

Remember, your ability to love is not diminished by your pain. In fact, every time you move through rage and come back to yourself, you expand your own capacity for empathy and understanding. You become more fluent in the language of healing, both for yourself and for others who may one day need your wisdom. Your journey through anger to truth is not just for you; it is a beacon for those who are still lost in the flames.

So let your anger speak, let it shout if it must, but do not let it be the only voice you hear. Listen, too, for the gentle truths that endure beneath the noise: you are worthy, you are whole, you are loved by the universe simply because you exist. Your softness is not a gift to those who hurt you—it is a gift to yourself, a promise of new beginnings, of hope, of a life lived in the fullness of your own radiant truth.

In the end, your anger is the storm that clears the air, but your truth is the sunlight that returns. Let yourself be both: fierce and gentle, wild and calm, broken and whole. Your journey through rage and back to love is the story of your strength. Walk it bravely, for you are both the storm and the calm that follows."

-Steve De'lano Garcia

Altid et gensyn værd 💛"som et mentalt myggestik, du ikke kan lade være med at klø" ❤️
01/02/2023

Altid et gensyn værd 💛

"som et mentalt myggestik, du ikke kan lade være med at klø"
❤️

Et digt om hvordan det føles at leve med ADHD & ADD.Det hele er skrevet på baggrund af +350 personers oplevelse med ADHD & ADD. Alt er selvfølgeligt forskell...

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